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Kulikowski Exhibition Room
Kulikowski, feminine: Kulikowska, is a Polish surname. It may be variously transliterated as Kulikowsky, Kulikovsky, etc. It is a toponymic surname derived from any of places named Kulikówka, Kulików, or Kulikowo. Notable people with the surname include: * Lidia Kulikovski (born 1951), Moldovan librarian and bibliographer * (1872–1910), Polish playwright, poet, feminist, teacher, naturalist, reporter *Michael Kulikowski (born 1970), American historian *Mykola Ovsianiko-Kulikovsky (1768–1846), Ukrainian composer *Nikolai Kulikovsky (1811–1958), second husband of Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia *Traudl Kulikowsky Traudl Kulikowsky (real name: Edeltraud Kulikowski, born 9 December 1943) is a former East Germany, German film actress. Between the mid-1960s and mid-1970s she took prominent roles in a succession of East Germany, East German cinema and televis ... (born 1943), German actress * Zofia Weigl (née Kulikowska; c. 1885–1940), Polish biologist, a collabo ...
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Polish Surname
Polish names have two main elements: the given name, and the surname. The usage of personal names in Poland is generally governed by civil law (legal system), civil law, church law, personal taste and family custom. The law requires a given name to indicate the person's gender. Almost all Polish female names end in the vowel ''-a'', and most male names end in a consonant or a vowel other than ''a''. There are, however, a few male names that end in ''a'', which are often old and uncommon, such as Barnaba, Bonawentura, Jarema, Kosma, Kuba (formerly only a diminutive of Jakub, nowadays also a given name on its own) and Saba. Maria (given name), Maria is a female name that can be used also as a second name for males. Since the High Middle Ages, Polish-sounding surnames ending with the masculine ''-ski'' suffix, including ''-cki'' and ''-dzki'', and the corresponding feminine suffix ''-ska/-cka/-dzka'' were associated with the nobility (Polish ''szlachta''), which alone, in the early ...
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Toponymic Surname
A toponymic surname or habitational surname or byname is a surname or byname derived from a place name,"Toponymic Surnames as Evidence of the Origin: Some Medieval Views"
, by Benjamin Z. Kedar.
Last Names and Their Meanings
''ancestry.com''
which included names of specific locations, such as the individual's place of origin, residence, or lands that they held, or, more generically, names that were derived from regional topographic features.Iris Shagrir, "The Medieval Evolution of By-naming: Notions from the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem", ''In Laudem Hierosolymitani'' (Shagrir, Ellenblum ...
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Kulikówka
Kulikówka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dobrzyniewo Duże, within Białystok County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately north of Dobrzyniewo Duże and north-west of the regional capital Białystok Białystok is the largest city in northeastern Poland and the capital of the Podlaskie Voivodeship. It is the List of cities and towns in Poland, tenth-largest city in Poland, second in terms of population density, and thirteenth in area. Biał .... References Villages in Białystok County {{Białystok-geo-stub ...
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Kulików
Kulykiv (; ) is a rural settlement in Lviv Raion, Lviv Oblast, western Ukraine. It is located about north of the city of Lviv. Kulykiv hosts the administration of Kulykiv settlement hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine. A Ukrainian star actor of Taras Bulba and other films and stage performances in Kyiv Ivan Franko theater Bohdan Stupka was born there. Population: History Until 18 July 2020, Kulykiv belonged to Zhovkva Raion. The raion was abolished in July 2020 as part of the administrative reform of Ukraine, which reduced the number of raions of Lviv Oblast to seven. The area of Zhovkva Raion was merged into Lviv Raion. Until 26 January 2024, Kulykiv was designated urban-type settlement. On this day, a new law entered into force which abolished this status, and Kulykiv became a rural settlement. Economy Transportation Kulykiv railway station is in the selo of Mervychi, about west of the settlement. It is on the railway connecting Lviv via Zhovkva with Rava-Ruska. There ...
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Lidia Kulikovski
Lidia Kulikovski (born 8 March 1951) is a Moldovan librarian and bibliographer. As head of the Hasdeu Municipal Library, she extended the library network opening nine branches in Chișinău focused mainly on Romanian literature. Education Kulikovski was born Nicoreni, Drochia District, Moldovan SSR. She graduated in Philology (librarianship section) at the State University of Moldova in 1973, having Ion Osadcenco and Anatol Ciobanu among her professors. In 2003, she obtained a doctoral degree in Pedagogy, with a dissertation on the "Evolution of library services for disadvantaged people in the context of a society's democratization". Career On graduating, Kulikovski led a subsidiary of the Municipal Library of Chișinău. In 1978–1982, she was the head of the "centralized library system" of Cahul. She then returned to the Municipal Library to lead its acquisitions team until 1989. Either in 1989 or in 1990 Kulikovski became the director of the Hasdeu Municipal Library, a ...
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Michael Kulikowski
Michael Kulikowski (born September 3, 1970) is an American historian. He is a professor of history and classics and the head of the history department at Pennsylvania State University. Kulikowski specializes in the history of the western Mediterranean world of late antiquity. He is sometimes associated with the Toronto School of History and was a student of Walter Goffart. Biography Kulikowski is a son of English-born computer engineer Casimir Alexander Kulikowski, and a grandson of the Polish-born inventor Victor Kulikowski. At an early age, he aspired to be a French Floutist. Then, he took his interest in World History in another direction, in another country - first Canada, then the USA. He received his BA (1991) from Rutgers University, and his MA (1992) and PhD (1998) from the University of Toronto. He also gained a Licentiate of Mediaeval Studies (canon law) from the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies in 1995. At the University of Toronto, Kulikowski was a student ...
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Mykola Ovsianiko-Kulikovsky
Mykola Ovsianiko-Kulikovsky (Russian: Николай Овсянико-Куликовский, ''Nikolay Ovsyaniko-Kulikovskiy'', 1768–1846) was the purported author of a famous musical hoax Symphony No. 21 (Ovsianiko-Kulikovsky), perpetrated by composer and violinist Mikhail Goldstein. In 1948, Goldstein announced that he had discovered the manuscript of a symphony by Ovsianiko-Kulikovsky in the archives of the Odesa Conservatory where he worked. The G minor work, numbered 21, was said to have been written in 1809; it bore the inscription "for the dedication of the Odessa Theater". The discovery caused a great deal of excitement in Soviet Union, Soviet musical circles, for it was seen as proof that Russia had been able to produce a symphonist of comparable stature to Joseph Haydn. Furthermore, the symphony contained Ukrainian folk songs and ended with a Cossack dance, showing that the composer had a nationalist awareness. This piece was subsequently proven to be a fake.Tarusk ...
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Nikolai Kulikovsky
Nikolai Alexandrovich Kulikovsky (5 November 1881 – 11 August 1958) was the second husband of Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia, the sister of Tsar Nicholas II and daughter of Tsar Alexander III. He was born into a military landowning family from the south of the Russian Empire, and followed the family tradition by entering the army. In 1903, he was noticed by Grand Duchess Olga during a military review, and they became close friends. Olga wanted to divorce her first husband, Duke Peter Alexandrovich of Oldenburg, and marry Kulikovsky, but neither her husband nor her brother, the Tsar, would allow it. During World War I, Olga eventually obtained a divorce and married Kulikovsky. They had two sons. Her brother was deposed in the Russian Revolution of 1917, and Kulikovsky was dismissed from the army by the revolutionary government. The Kulikovskys were forced into exile, and he became a farmer and businessman in Denmark, where they lived until after World War II. In 1948 ...
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Traudl Kulikowsky
Traudl Kulikowsky (real name: Edeltraud Kulikowski, born 9 December 1943) is a former East Germany, German film actress. Between the mid-1960s and mid-1970s she took prominent roles in a succession of East Germany, East German cinema and television films. After refusing, in 1982, to continue acting as an Unofficial collaborator, informant for the Stasi she joined the :de:Frauen für den Frieden, Women for Peace movement in or before 1983. She herself now came under increased levels of Stasi surveillance, and in 1984 the authorities granted her an :de:Ausreiseantrag, "Emigration passport". She moved to West Berlin in 1984. Life Edeltraud Kulikowski was born in Łódź, Litzmannstadt (as it became known between 1939 and 1945). By the time of Kulikowski's birth, in the context of Invasion of Poland, the Second World War, the city had become a Reichsgau Wartheland, German city. Her first employment was in the manufacturing sector, but even at that point she was also participati ...
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Zofia Weigl
Zofia Weigl (née Kulikowska; c. 1885–1940) was a Polish biologist who was a collaborator in research to find a vaccine for typhus. Life and work Kulikowska was born into the family of lawyers, Wiktor and Marta Kulikowski. She had three sisters: Wanda, Helena and Stefania. Zofia passed her high school final exams at the girls' high school in Lviv (now Ukraine). She graduated from the University of Lviv. In mid-1912, the school board appointed her as teacher at the four-class folk school in Loshniiv. She went on to earn her doctorate in biology and became an associate professor and began scientific collaboration with Rudolf Weigl (inventor of the world's first effective vaccine against typhus) at the Lviv Institute for Typhus and Virus Research. They married in 1921 and she took his last name as her own. Zofia Weigl became one of her husband's closest collaborators at the Institute. During the Nazi occupation of Lviv, she became one of the first lice feeders who provided ...
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Kuligowski
Kuligowski, feminine: Kuligowska, is a Polish surname. It is a toponymic surname derived from any of places named Kuligów, Kuligowo, or Kuligi. Notable people with the surname include: * Adam Kuligowski (born 1955), Polish chess player * Eddie Kuligowski (1946–2021), French photographer * Erica Kuligowski, American social research scientist * (born 1979), Polish volleyball player See also * * *Kulikowski References

{{Surname Polish-language surnames Toponymic surnames ...
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Polish-language Surnames
Polish (, , or simply , ) is a West Slavic language of the Lechitic subgroup, within the Indo-European language family, and is written in the Latin script. It is primarily spoken in Poland and serves as the official language of the country, as well as the language of the Polish diaspora around the world. In 2024, there were over 39.7 million Polish native speakers. It ranks as the sixth-most-spoken among languages of the European Union. Polish is subdivided into regional dialects. It maintains strict T–V distinction pronouns, honorifics, and various forms of formalities when addressing individuals. The traditional 32-letter Polish alphabet has nine additions (, , , , , , , , ) to the letters of the basic 26-letter Latin alphabet, while removing three (x, q, v). Those three letters are at times included in an extended 35-letter alphabet. The traditional set comprises 23 consonants and 9 written vowels, including two nasal vowels (, ) denoted by a reversed diacritic hook ca ...
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